She's only the cleaner!
Central Counties Air Operations Unit April 2008

She's only the cleaner!

I was asked recently to assist a hospitality business build a greater sense of teamship within their organisation. To bring people closer together.

Sitting down with the business owner I went through the rudiments of what they aimed to achieve, their expectations. It also gave me the opportunity to outline how I would manage the task using our innovative people wellbeing and insight tool, HumaniXs. My intention was to build them what we call a "fluid risk matrix". All businesses and organisations are in constant flux so having access to "warm" data is crucial if we are to bring context to experiences people are having due to the comings and goings of the most complex system within any business, people.

It was a relatively small business but every single person within it was a vital cog. That is when they passed this particular comment after I asked them if he they had included all the staff involved in the business.

They said this,

"Well, we do have another person but she's only the cleaner so I would not bother involving her!"

The seemingly throwaway comment immediately took me back to my time managing the Central Counties Air Operations Unit and providing air support to Staffordshire and West Mercia Police. The picture you see above was taken in 2008 at our base at Halfpenny Green Airport. They were magical times, and the whole team was like a family. Within aviation you soon come to realise that each person in the image literally keeps you alive as the safety required on a day-to-day, hour-by-hour basis is profound.

There is one person that immediately sticks out and she is wearing the green jumper. A small in stature figure and standing front and centre of the image amongst 14 other proud people. She was our unit's cleaner. Let's call her Jean.

Jean was the linchpin of the unit. She worked three mornings a week. Jean didn't actually need to work as her successful husband probably earnt more money than all those 14 other people put together, but she loved her job. Jean mothered all those who worked at the unit and probably spent more time making us drinks and chatting than cleaning. She even lodged nomadic pilots at her beautiful home in the countryside as the annex above the double garage was an ideal place for them to take time out and recover from busy shifts when living away from home.

Most importantly, Jean was a "safe pair of ears". We would regularly confide our problems to her as she listened, and when necessary offer us sage advice from a life lived. She was a vital "informal support network" and we all, without doubt, confided more in her than we did with our more formal peer and supervisory networks. We generally speak least about the things that matter most, but not with Jean. She knew everything as she saw every person on the unit. Jean was the conduit and glue across all the shifts. Countless times I sat down with a morning coffee in the unit kitchen with Jean and talked through personal dilemmas and you always felt a sense of relief and an unburdening once you had regaled your woes to her.

If you think about it, Jean played a pivotal role in flight safety! Allowing people to vent and share some of their most worrying concerns.

And here is the thing. Imagine a base or business without a Jean. Who actually keeps the premises "spick and span" for others to work in? How do the premises look when senior officers, clients or members of the public visit if it is not well maintained and loved? At best, the responsibility reverts to others "more senior" in the unit who may see it as an additional responsibility, a chore, which is "below them" and when added to their other seemingly "more important" duties that cleanliness soon deteriorates.

Thinking back, Jean was also a barometer, which may seem a very strange thing to say but consider this. How senior leaders at the very pinnacle of the organisation communicate and behave (including implementing policies and procedures) will inevitably be reflected in how Jean works. Her level of engagement, her resilience and her own behaviours will all be a reflection of what is happening at the very top. Conway's Law. So, if you wish to gain an insight into how successful your business and it's culture is monitor Jean for a while.

And here's the crunch! If you ever ignore the person who cleans your working space, ignore them at your peril. Just remember how vitally important a cog they are and the importance of the role they play. Jean did not just keep the premises clean she provided the most consistent and dependable pair eyes and ears possible.

This is the very concept on which our groundbreaking HumaniXs Wellbeing Assessment is built. It is your constant insight, the eyes and ears into your ever changing and fluid workplace. Most importantly HumaniXs opens up individual and personal dialogue that is so vitally important but so often neglected until it is too late. HumaniXs gets you ahead of the danger, becoming proactive rather than reactive to underlying and invisible workplace issues, whilst bringing people and teams closer together with a shared awareness.

HumaniXs, when deployed across a whole organisation will also enable you to figure out where the constraining factors and bottlenecks for success currently lie, allowing the organisation itself to quickly solve its own problems with its very own people. The answers are in the room when people start talking openly and in a safe environment, free from finger pointing and criticism.

Want to know how you can have your own Jean and unleash the power of your very own people, then get in touch for an informal chat.



Sean David McErlean

Flight operations officer

1 年

Damn good article from you David.?? Everyone matters in any organisation. I remember watching one of the many Traffic Cops series filmed from within central motorway support group about the lady chaplain who not only dished out donuts to the lads but also lent a listening ear even going out on ops with them to see the real life. Amazing lady & a superb bunch of down to earth police officers. Think the brummie accent had something to do with it as well.

Chris Hollis

B737 First Officer

1 年

Very well said David, the true 'glue' of the unit and longest serving! Hope all's well..

Shaun Laverty

First Officer at Norse Atlantic Airways on the Boeing 787.

1 年

David. Beautifully and sensitively written; it's brought a tear to my eye! 20 years ago whilst working at the Air Unit I still remember Jean comforting me with a cuddle and using the perfect words to make it all OK after I'd just lost my dear mother. As you say, no words or measurements can define the value of such a person in any organisation and to trivialise or minimise them by saying 'only' does them a huge injustice. Probably related to the familiar adage 'knowing the cost of everything but the value of nothing' !

Yricka Gardner

Aviation Quality Auditor at National Police Air Services

1 年

So very true, when I was in Bedfordshire Police and based at HQ I'd on a regular basis drop into the office in the basement where our janitors were to have a chat, coffee, or take them some home baked cake. Whenever our office needed something moving, or a board putting up they'd always pop up. Treat everyone with as much importance as the chief constable, no matter what their role is within the organisation.

Adrian Hide

Experienced driver risk management specialist, road safety expert, driver trainer, and proud EV driver!

1 年

I love this post David Howell, there are many cogs in a gearbox, the smallest one of all is the one that gets the vehicle moving, take any of them out and the vehicle is stranded. Good people are like cogs in a gearbox so all are special.

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